Los Angeles Times

Samsung touts ‘smart’ gadgets

-

Samsung wants to sell the digital brains that will go into billions of “smart” home appliances, industrial sensors and other Internet-connected gadgets — even if the gadgets aren’t made by Samsung.

At a technology conference Tuesday in San Francisco, the South Korean company unveiled a new line of tiny electronic components that combine low-power computer chips, transmitte­rs and software. Manufactur­ers can build the components into items as varied as television­s, parking meters and orthopedic shoes.

The new Artik components are key to Samsung’s goal of becoming a major player in the so-called Internet of Things, the tech industry’s buzzword for the notion that all kinds of electronic devices can be connected over the Internet. This could be a $3-trillion industry in the next five years, analysts at Internatio­nal Data Corp. have estimated.

Samsung is going after that market at a time when earnings from its core smartphone business have sagged in the face of challenges from Apple and upstart Chinese phone makers. Samsung also makes other electronic components, TVs, refrigerat­ors and other home appliances.

Company President Young Sohn declined to be specific when asked how big Samsung hopes the Artik business will become. But he noted that analysts have estimated there would be billions of Internet-connected gadgets and machines in coming years.

Other companies also want a piece of that market. Chip makers Intel and Qualcomm are also making energy-efficient processors for the coming wave of connected gadgets. IBM, Hewlett-Packard and Cisco want to sell systems for collecting and analyzing data from those gadgets.

Samsung said it would use the Artik components in all the home appliances it makes, but the company hopes other manufactur­ers will use them too. Sohn said the components are designed to be compatible with other systems. Samsung’s SmartThing­s division also announced a new Internetba­sed platform that other companies can use to create programs and track data collected from smart devices.

In demonstrat­ion videos, Samsung showed the Artik components being used in motion sensors designed for orthopedic patients to wear on their shoes, enabling therapists to monitor their walking ability, and in devices that farmers can use to monitor moisture levels in the soil.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States